Argentina: New Perception VAT Regime on Sale of Food and Products for Human Consumption

Maria del Carmen
March 22, 2023

Argentina has recently expanded its perception VAT (Value Added Tax) collection regime to ensure efficient tax administration. It has included selling food and other products for human consumption, beverages, personal hygiene, and cleaning items under its scope.

The Argentinian Federal Administration of Public Revenue (AFIP) established this through Resolution No. 5329/2023 in early February 2023.

The new resolution aims to further expand the regime known as “Régimen de Percepción del Impuesto al Valor Agregado” to the categories related to food and other products for human consumption, beverages, personal hygiene, and cleaning items.

Taxpayers who issue invoices concerning these provisions must ensure compliance with the document data requirements, used as evidence of the collection for the final VAT calculation. This will be further discussed in this article.

Scope of the VAT Collection Regime

The VAT Collection Regime in Argentina is a scheme by which the seller, designated as “Collection Agent”, charges the buyer an amount additional to the sale price. As a result, the supplier will charge the fee on top of the purchase value, which includes the price and the VAT.

This new regime obliges VAT-taxable persons to act as collection agents when selling food products for human consumption, beverages, personal hygiene and cleaning items. A few exceptions include meats, fruits and bread made exclusively from wheat flour, among others. Taxable people registered for VAT purposes will also be subject to this regime when acquiring said products.

Applicable rates

 The collection regime will only apply when each transaction amount exceeds ARS 3000.

The fee amount is determined by applying 3% to the net price of the operation resulting from the invoice or equivalent document.

This percentage will be 1.50% in the case of operations taxed with a rate equivalent to 50% of the general VAT tax rate.

Reporting and invoices as proof of perception

The information and payment of the perceptions carried out under this regime will be reported through the Withholding Control System (SICORE), using code 602.

The resolution also establishes that the only valid document to prove the payment of the perceptions will be the invoice or equivalent document (issued under the current invoicing regulations). The document will record the amount received in a discriminated manner and with express mention of this regime.

Those taxable persons using “Fiscal Controllers” documents of “New Technology” to comply with the provisions of the preceding paragraph must use the section “Other Taxes” on the document.

 Implementation date

The collection regime will be applicable for taxable events perfected as of 1 April 2023. As a result, sellers of food and other products for human consumption, beverages, personal hygiene and cleaning items will charge the buyer an additional 3% or 1.5% as appropriate on the sale price according to the applicable fee.

Need to ensure VAT compliance in Argentina? Get in touch with our tax experts.

Sign up for Email Updates

Stay up to date with the latest tax and compliance updates that may impact your business.

Author

Maria del Carmen

Maria del Carmen is a regulatory counsel at Sovos. Based in Chile and originally from Mexico, she obtained a Law Degree and a specialization degree in Tax Law in her home country. She also has a Master’s degree in Tax Law from the Panamerican University Mexico, and an International Tax Law Diploma with ITAM and Duke University. Having worked in the SAT for seven years, and in the Pemex tax team, she has gained extensive experience of tax regimes across Latin America.
Share this post

Hungary - Insurance Premium Tax
EMEA IPT
July 8, 2024
Hungary Insurance Premium Tax (IPT): An Overview

Regarding calculating Insurance Premium Tax (IPT), Hungary is the only country in the EU where the regime uses the so-called sliding scale rate model.

Understanding-IPT-Prepayments-in-Hungary
EMEA IPT
September 20, 2022
Understanding IPT Prepayments in Hungary

Update: 17 April 2025 by Edit Buliczka New IPT Prepayment Rules in Hungary Starting in 2025, new prepayment rules will apply to the Extra Profit Tax on Insurance Premium Tax (EPTIPT). The current structure of two prepayments—due in May and November—will be replaced by a single prepayment, which must be made by 10 December 2025. […]

E-Invoicing Compliance North America
May 29, 2025
Global E-archiving Compliance: The Essentials of E-invoice Storage

The digital business landscape is forever changing, yet one thing is certain: electronic archiving is more than a convenience – it’s a matter of compliance. As governments worldwide invest in digital tax transformation initiatives like e-invoicing and e-reporting, a complex web of e-archiving requirements that vary across borders is also developing. Understanding your e-archiving requirements […]

unclaimed property laws
North America Unclaimed Property
May 14, 2025
From Crypto to NFTs: The expanding scope of unclaimed property laws

Last month, a cross-functional group of Sovos unclaimed property experts—including folks from product development, product marketing, managed services, our general counsel’s office, and the consulting team—traveled to Tucson, Arizona to the Unclaimed Property Professional Organization’s annual conference. We spent the week diving deep into all things unclaimed property. There was one topic that kept coming […]

Finance Leaders
EMEA North America Tax Compliance
May 14, 2025
The Changing Indirect Tax Landscape: How Finance Leaders Are Adapting

We recently partnered with StudioID on a global survey of 150 finance leaders to reveal significant insights into how companies are navigating the increasingly complex world of indirect tax compliance. The research, which included CFOs, EVPs/SVPs/VPs of Finance, and Finance Directors from companies with revenues ranging from $500 million to over $5 billion, provides a […]

CATNAT Regime
EMEA VAT & Fiscal Reporting
April 29, 2025
CATNAT Regime: Treatment of Natural Catastrophe Insurance in France

As some countries either introduce or consider introducing mandatory natural catastrophe insurance (e.g., Italy this year), France is ahead of the curve. This is because France already has a specific compensation scheme in place for coverage of property against natural disasters, and has had one since 1982. The importance of the scheme is clear, as […]

Hungary tax penalty
EMEA VAT & Fiscal Reporting
April 15, 2025
Hungary: Tax Penalty Regime

Hungary’s tax penalty consequences of non-compliance with tax requirements are governed by the Act on Rules of Taxation. The law outlines a range of sanctions for non-compliance, including tax penalties, default penalties, late payment interest and self-revision fees. This blog will provide an overview of each sanction and summarise recent changes in this area. Types […]